Difference between revisions of "Ernle FamHist"

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Family Name:  Ernle (pronounced Earn'-lee)
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Family Name:  ERNLE (pronounced Earn'-lee)
  
Name Variants: various variant forms of the surname appear starting with the letters A, E, I, O, U, Y, and H, and including EARNLE, EARNLEE, EARNLEY, EARNLIE, EARNLY, EARNLYE, ERNELE, ERNLE, ERNLEY, YERNLE, YERNLEY, etc.  
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Name Variants: various variant forms of the surname appear starting with the letters A, E, I, O, U, Y, and H, and including EARNLE, EARNLEE, EARNLEY, EARNLIE, EARNLY, EARNLYE, ERNELE, ERNELEY, ERNLE, ERNLEY, ERNLIE, HURNLEY, YERNLE, YERNLEY, etc. Occasionally, the medial 'n' is dropped in references to known members of this sib which can be the source of confusion with similar surnames with a separate genealogical origin and family history. Only painstakingly-acquired knowledge of the ramifications of the ERNLE family and careful study of the context of every instance where this occurs makes it possible to discern such instances of 'n-dropped' forms which nonetheless refer to members of this family rather than an unrelated one with a similar name whose spelling may occasionally overlap with the form used in an individual reference or multiple ones when concerning a member of what is more usually denoted by an ERNLE variant including the medial 'n'.
  
 
N.B. Not all variants necessarily occur in the AALT and its WAALT, but have been encountered in over twenty years of research into this family by the main researcher and writer of this page, named below. It should be noted that as a locative surname derived from the name of a place where the person originally denominated with the name as a surname was a landholder, the name was originally prefixed by the French preposition, sometimes known as the noble particle (''particule de la noblesse'') 'de'. This began to be dropped after the first few centuries of use to leave the main element which is derived from an Anglo-Saxon elements forming the original Sussex place name which gave rise to this particular family, apparently the only one know by the name ERNLE (or variant) consistently over a number of centuries in the British Isles. For the German surname spelt similarly, there is a different though possibly related etymological derivation, and, it should go without saying, that it is a genealogically distinct surname unrelated to that developed in England of the 12th century. Occasional instances of confusion between similar surnames found in the British Isles, including Ireland and Scotland may arise from similar Anglo-Saxon word elements elsewhere giving rise to another family with a similar surname. This can be seen to have occurred with the surname now usually spelt ERLE, derived from Maiden Earley (once Earnley) in Berkshire, which began as 'de ERLEY' and was a family of knightly rank which gave rise to a much more extensive sib than did the Sussex family named ERNLE, members of the minor or lower feudal nobility who rarely achieved knightly rank in their first few centuries, whose head was seated on manorial estates at Earnley on the Sussex coast near Chichester, and in neighbouring parishes, including Sidlesham, and East Wittering. For more on this please consult the article initiated by the present page manager and largely written by him at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernle].
 
N.B. Not all variants necessarily occur in the AALT and its WAALT, but have been encountered in over twenty years of research into this family by the main researcher and writer of this page, named below. It should be noted that as a locative surname derived from the name of a place where the person originally denominated with the name as a surname was a landholder, the name was originally prefixed by the French preposition, sometimes known as the noble particle (''particule de la noblesse'') 'de'. This began to be dropped after the first few centuries of use to leave the main element which is derived from an Anglo-Saxon elements forming the original Sussex place name which gave rise to this particular family, apparently the only one know by the name ERNLE (or variant) consistently over a number of centuries in the British Isles. For the German surname spelt similarly, there is a different though possibly related etymological derivation, and, it should go without saying, that it is a genealogically distinct surname unrelated to that developed in England of the 12th century. Occasional instances of confusion between similar surnames found in the British Isles, including Ireland and Scotland may arise from similar Anglo-Saxon word elements elsewhere giving rise to another family with a similar surname. This can be seen to have occurred with the surname now usually spelt ERLE, derived from Maiden Earley (once Earnley) in Berkshire, which began as 'de ERLEY' and was a family of knightly rank which gave rise to a much more extensive sib than did the Sussex family named ERNLE, members of the minor or lower feudal nobility who rarely achieved knightly rank in their first few centuries, whose head was seated on manorial estates at Earnley on the Sussex coast near Chichester, and in neighbouring parishes, including Sidlesham, and East Wittering. For more on this please consult the article initiated by the present page manager and largely written by him at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernle].

Revision as of 22:48, 25 July 2022

ERNLE Family History (including variants spellings of the surname)

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Family Name: ERNLE (pronounced Earn'-lee)

Name Variants: various variant forms of the surname appear starting with the letters A, E, I, O, U, Y, and H, and including EARNLE, EARNLEE, EARNLEY, EARNLIE, EARNLY, EARNLYE, ERNELE, ERNELEY, ERNLE, ERNLEY, ERNLIE, HURNLEY, YERNLE, YERNLEY, etc. Occasionally, the medial 'n' is dropped in references to known members of this sib which can be the source of confusion with similar surnames with a separate genealogical origin and family history. Only painstakingly-acquired knowledge of the ramifications of the ERNLE family and careful study of the context of every instance where this occurs makes it possible to discern such instances of 'n-dropped' forms which nonetheless refer to members of this family rather than an unrelated one with a similar name whose spelling may occasionally overlap with the form used in an individual reference or multiple ones when concerning a member of what is more usually denoted by an ERNLE variant including the medial 'n'.

N.B. Not all variants necessarily occur in the AALT and its WAALT, but have been encountered in over twenty years of research into this family by the main researcher and writer of this page, named below. It should be noted that as a locative surname derived from the name of a place where the person originally denominated with the name as a surname was a landholder, the name was originally prefixed by the French preposition, sometimes known as the noble particle (particule de la noblesse) 'de'. This began to be dropped after the first few centuries of use to leave the main element which is derived from an Anglo-Saxon elements forming the original Sussex place name which gave rise to this particular family, apparently the only one know by the name ERNLE (or variant) consistently over a number of centuries in the British Isles. For the German surname spelt similarly, there is a different though possibly related etymological derivation, and, it should go without saying, that it is a genealogically distinct surname unrelated to that developed in England of the 12th century. Occasional instances of confusion between similar surnames found in the British Isles, including Ireland and Scotland may arise from similar Anglo-Saxon word elements elsewhere giving rise to another family with a similar surname. This can be seen to have occurred with the surname now usually spelt ERLE, derived from Maiden Earley (once Earnley) in Berkshire, which began as 'de ERLEY' and was a family of knightly rank which gave rise to a much more extensive sib than did the Sussex family named ERNLE, members of the minor or lower feudal nobility who rarely achieved knightly rank in their first few centuries, whose head was seated on manorial estates at Earnley on the Sussex coast near Chichester, and in neighbouring parishes, including Sidlesham, and East Wittering. For more on this please consult the article initiated by the present page manager and largely written by him at [1]. (Commentary by Richard Carruthers-Żurowski, 25 July 2022Richard Carruthers-Zurowski (talk) 22:36, 25 July 2022 (UTC)).


Managing Page Editor: RC: Richard Carruthers-Żurowski leliwite at gmail dot com (convert email element substitutions and elide all into one string before using this email address), who welcomes correspondence on this topic.

  • Other contributors:


Twelfth Century


  • Name
    • AALT document
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    • External citations






Thirteenth Century

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    • AALT document
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Fourteenth Century

  • William ERNELEY of Arundel, Sussex
    • 1458. Wilts. Thomas Clotte /Slotte v. William, earl of Arundell (Arundel); John Dudley de Dudley, Staffs, knight; Thomas Barette de Arundel, Sussex, armiger; and William Erneley de Arundel, Sussex, armiger. Trespass: jury in respite[2]; [3]
    • 1458. Sussex. William Ernele, armiger v. John Nudegate (Newdigate) de Cranley (Cranleigh), Surrey. Debt for £13/6/8; early process. [4]
  • Comments: William ERNELEY appears thus far only in 1458, with his residence in Arundel, Sussex. He was, from the case of trespass above, plausibly associated with William FITZALAN, 9th Earl of Arundel (of the 2nd creation, reigned 1438-1487), and Sir John DUDLEY (also known as SUTTON), Knt, of Dudley, Staffordshire.

ERNELEY's appearance together as a defendant in a plea with DUDLEY is perhaps an early example of what later came to be a closer association of a member of the ERNLE family with that of DUDLEY which can be seen some forty years later in the early career of later Tudor solicitor-general, attorney-general, and lord chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas (cjcp)(1519-1520), Sir John ERNLE, Knt. As a young man, John ERNLE (1464/65-1520) began his legal practice as a Gray's Inn lawyer and associate of one of the notorious financial agents of King Henry VII, Edmund DUDLEY (exec. 1510), but ERNLE survived his patron's fall to rise in royal favour as a legal advisor and agent to Henry VII's son and successor, King Henry VIII. See the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, under Sir John ERNLEY (1464/5-1520), for more on this later connexion.

    • External citations
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Fifteenth Century


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    • AALT document
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Sixteenth Century


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Seventeenth Century


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Eighteenth Century


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    • AALT document
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    • External citations